Mr. and Mrs. W. F.
Hein left Saturday forenoon on their trip to Denver. A. L. Sparkes
is carrying mail on route 1 during Mr. Hein’s vacation. G. N.
Crandell made the trip for him Monday.

G. W. Hart and his
grandson Vern left Monday on a camping and fishing expedition at
Red Cedar.

Mr. and Mrs. C. D.
Fowler and Miss Alice returned from Minneapolis last Thursday,
accompanied by their granddaughter, Winnifred Fowler, who will
spent the summer weeks here. While in the city the folks saw the
big parade of the Shriners, and also Mr. Fowler visited J. W.
Vogel. He found Mr. Vogel quite well and assisting at the store
part of the time.

One bottle Catsup,
one jar mustard, both for 15 cents, at Tritsch’s I. G. A.
Store, Friday and Sat. only.

Mrs. A. E.
Fradenburg and Mrs. R. J. Stuve drove to Marshfield and Colby last
Sunday to see some of the damage done by the wind storm Saturday
afternoon. Several barns and sheds in that territory were blown
down.

M. Kretschmer was
at Madison a couple of days last week attending the
undertaker’s state convention.

The track oiler of
the Omaha railroad went east of Elroy Thursday, and through on the
west bound track Sunday.

Miss Marion
Graves, of Eau Claire, is a guest of Miss Zella Brandstedter. The
young ladies are camping at the Hein home during their absence.

Paul Winner spent
the last of the week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Winner.
He is at the head of the state employment bureau, directly under
the secretary of labor, Frances Perkins from whom he received the
appointment. Mr. Winner had been in St. Paul where he addressed a
convention of the Minnesota employment agencies.

Hon. Theodore
Damman, secretary of start, give this notice to auto owners: "A
great number of automobile owners seem to be of the opinion that
the license fees for the care they owned and licensed last year
will be reduced on July1. We take this means of notifying them that
there is no reduction in license fees on July 1, 1934. The special
law passed by the 1933 legislature reducing the fees for
automobiles on July 1, applied only to licensees for 1933, and
those persons who are waiting until July 1 or later this year
before getting their 1934 licenses will be obliged to pay the same
fee that would have been collected *the rest of the column was
unavailable at the time of transcribing.**

The board of
review completed its labors Tuesday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Bunce and son Junior, of Eau Claire, were callers at C. P.
Olson’s Monday evening.

Nick Harris and
family, of Eau Claire, and Emil Garber and wife, of Altoona, spent
Saturday and Sunday at Edwin Harris’, Roland and Muriel
Harris returned home with them for a visit.

Miss Mamie
Eisenhart, of Little Rock, Ark., visited from Thursday evening
until Sunday evening with her father, Christ. Eisenhart. She is
employed with the Western Union at Little Rock. It is twenty-seven
years ago Miss Eisenhart left here, and twenty years since father
and daughter have been together. Saturday Henry Laffe and his
mother took Mr. Eisenhart and his daughter to North Bend to visit
Mrs. Haag and family.